Jock Tamson's Bairns
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"We're aw Jock Tamson's Bairns" (Lowland Scots for we're all John Thomson's children) is a saying in Scotland and is known in other parts of the world. Nowadays, the phrase is often used to mean "we're all the same under the skin".
It has been suggested as a euphemism for God, so the saying could mean "we are all God's children". Scottish Gaelic also has the shorter saying "Clann MhicTamhais" (Thomson/MacTavish's children/clan). This is a common egalitarian sentiment in Scottish national identity, also evident in the popularity of the Robert Burns song A Man's A Man for A' That.
Although Jock Tamson's Bairns is used as a personification of the Scots nation, it is also used to refer to the human race in general.[1]
It is also used when people think one of their number is showing off, or considers himself better than his peers: "Who does he think he is? We're all Jock Tamson's bairns."[2] The downside of this egalitarianism is the traditional lack of acceptance of anyone from a small community who moves on and up, socially or professionally, even if they display no conceit. "Too good for us now, are ye?"
One possible explanation of this phrase is that the Reverend John Thomson (Jock Tamson, Thamson), minister of Duddingston Kirk, Edinburgh, from 1805 to 1840, called the members of his congregation "ma bairns" ((English: 'my children') and this resulted in folk saying "we're a' Jock Tamson's bairns" which gave a sense of belonging to a select group.
"Jock Tamson" (John Thomson) would have also been a very common Scottish name, and would have been equivalent to such phrases as "John Doe", "John Smith", "Joe Bloggs" etc.
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[edit] See also
[edit] Sources
- Sinclair, Cecil; Jock Tamson's Bairns; General Register Office for Scotland; GROS 2000
- Dictionary of the Scots Language
[edit] References
- ^ DSL: "the human race, common humanity; also, with less universal force, a group of people united by a common sentiment, interest or purpose".
- ^ DSL quotes Anna Blair's Scottish Tales (1990): "eight silly men saw themselves at last as being all Jock Tamson’s bairns together, and none abune [above] the rest".